Anxious hearts : a novel
(2011)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Abrams, 2011
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781613120002 (electronic bk.) MWT12466132, 1613120001 (electronic bk.) 12466132
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

'Evangeline,' he repeated, calling at a whisper. 'Evangeline.' He was not calling that she may hear, he was calling that somehow her soul might know that he was devoted entirely to her, only to her. 'Evangeline, I will find you.' Eva and Gabe explore the golden forest of their seaside Maine town, unknowingly tracing the footsteps of two teens, Evangeline and Gabriel, who once lived in the idyllic wooded village of Acadia more than one hundred years ago. On the day that Evangeline and Gabriel were be wed, their village was attacked and the two were separated. And now in the present, Gabe has mysteriously disappeared from Eva. A dreamlike, loose retelling of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's famous love poem 'Evangeline,' Anxious Hearts tells an epic tale of unrequited love and the hope that true love can be reunited. From School Library Journal: 'Evangeline,' Longfellow's tale of Acadian lovers separated on the eve of their wedding day only to reunite tragically after years of longing, provides the springboard for Shaw's modern retelling. Chapters narrated by Eva alternate with those told by Gabriel. She tells the contemporary story of her growing awareness of and ensuing impassioned bond with an old childhood friend. Her love, Gabe, who is grappling with a family tragedy, scribbles in a notebook incessantly. It is not until they are separated that Eva reads the notebook, which turns out to be a close retelling of the original tale (Gabriel's words that comprise the alternate chapters). This plot structure is quite seamless in execution. Eva's voice keeps the book grounded in modern sensitivities. Like Longfellow, Shaw gives nature high importance through descriptive passages of his chosen Maine setting and pays homage in many other small ways from incorporating original lines into dialogue and transplanting subtleties of characters' personalities. He is in no way, however, a slave to Longfellow, delivering both a couple of steamier scenes and potential for happiness in the end

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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